Saturday, April 18, 2026

‘Founding of Semiquincentennial Lodge 250’

    

Rhode Island might not come to mind immediately when contemplating the Revolutionary War*, but their Grand Lodge has devised the novel way of celebrating America250 by chartering a “lodge of commemoration” to be at labor for the coming year.

From the publicity:


Semiquincentennial Lodge 250

Reflect on the Past
Celebrate the Present
Hope for the Future

Semiquincentennial Lodge 250 is chartered as a commemorative lodge dedicated to the 250th anniversary of America’s Declaration of Independence.

The tenets of Freemasonry have influenced the principles of freedom, equality, justice, and courage that are the foundation of our nation.

Semiquincentennial Lodge 250 celebrates the universality of Freemasonry and the importance of the tenets of our Craft to people throughout the world. It is a lodge that is open to and welcomes, both literally and figuratively, Freemasons wheresoever dispersed.

Semiquincentennial Lodge 250 will be opened officially with the presentation of the charter at the Grand Lodge Annual Meeting on May 18, 2026. All attending the Annual Meeting will receive a copy of this keepsake document.

Semiquincentennial Lodge 250 will be called to recess, but may be called to labor any time during the year at the will and pleasure of its Worshipful Master. The lodge will be officially closed at the Grand Lodge Annual Meeting in May 2027.


Program for May 2


Open Semi-Public
Occasional Grand Lodge
Rick Baccus
Most Worshipful Grand Master

Invocation

Pledge of Allegiance

Prologue and Guiding Principles
Stephen E. Mitchell
Past Grand Master

Reflect on the Past
Raymond A. Geer
Grand Historian

Celebrate the Present
Timothy L. Culhane
Director of Masonic Education

Hope for the Future
Joshua A. Irizarry, Past Master
St. Johns Lodge 1
Providence

Three Voices, One Spirit
Stephen E. Mitchell
Past Grand Master

Formal Presentation of the Petition
to Establish Semiquincentennial Lodge 250 
Gilbert J. Fontes, Jr.
Deputy Grand Master

Introduction of Grand Lodge Officers
and Guests

Benediction

Close Lodge
Rick Baccus
Most Worshipful Grand Master


Petition for charter

May 2, 2026A.D. | 6026A.L.

To the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations:

Bro. Rick Baccus, M∴ W∴ Grand Master

The undersigned, petitioners, being, Free and Accepted Master Masons, having the prosperity of the Fraternity at heart, and willing to exert their best endeavors to promote and diffuse the genuine principles of Masonry, respectfully represent,

That, to Honor the Contributions of Freemasons to the Prosperity of our State and Nation and for other good reasons, they are desirous of forming a Lodge of Commemoration within this jurisdiction, to be named Semiquincentennial Lodge No. 250, F. & A. M.

Therefore, they pray for letters of dispensation, or a warrant of constitution, to empower them to assemble as a legal Lodge, to discharge the duties of Masonry in a regular and constitutional manner, according to the original forms of the order, and the regulations of the Grand Lodge.


Scheduled Events

May 2 - The Founding of Semiquincentennial Lodge 250
May 18 - Grand Lodge Annual with issuing of Charter of Semiquincentennial Lodge 250
August TBA - Grand Lodge Picnic and Flag Ceremony
September 27 (tentative) - Time Capsule and Liberty Tree Planting
September 30 - Collegium Luminosum: Speaker on Rhode Island Masonic History
November 14 - Revolutionary Table Lodge


* In all fairness, it is said Freemasons from St. John’s Lodge in Providence were key to the destruction of the HMS Gaspee on June 10, 1772, a dangerous act of tax rebellion a year and a half before the Boston Tea Party.
     

Friday, April 17, 2026

‘The Low Vale Degree’

    
Click to enlarge.

I have too many Masonic Saturdays next month, so I’m on the fence—a stretch of Virginia Worm, if you will—about attending this outdoor degree, but it sounds like a terrific night.

Good Samaritan 336 is the lodge right on Lincoln Square in Gettysburg I keep telling you about. In addition to regular doings, the brethren host dinners with period menus, attire, and re-enactors to celebrate their famous town’s heritage. I don’t believe their Low Vale Degree is an annual event, but they have hosted these previously.

Historic Daniel Lady Farm is a local attraction, having served as the headquarters of Confederate Major General Edward “Allegheny” Johnson, who commanded a division that failed to take Culp’s Hill from the U.S. Army. (Read his report here.) Inevitably, it became a hospital for the rebels. They say blood stains are still visible.

Historic Daniel Lady Farm

This weekend, Lady Farm is hosting its Civil War Scout Immersion, two days of workshops on military drill, battle formations, and tactics, culminating in a battle re-enactment.

And the Fellow Craft Degree? If you are not aware, the rituals of Pennsylvania Freemasonry are different from whatever yours may be. They’re not bizarre; you will have no difficulty understanding what unfolds because the ritual elements are consistent, but that Grand Lodge’s work is unique in the country. My research over the years caused me to read that Pennsylvania ritual is akin to one found in northern England, but I have no firsthand experience out there to corroborate. Yet.

Obviously, Apprentices would not be admitted to this Second Degree of Freemasonry.

Historic Daniel Lady Farm

The lodge will be opened and closed with cannon fire. I mean artillery, not Vivat! drinking. The meal will be catered by Blue and Gray Bar & Grill, which is another reason to attend. If you choose not to join the group for dinner, the ticket price will be $30.

This May 30 event does not land on Memorial Day Weekend, if that conflict might deter you. The holiday weekend will be the previous week.
     

Thursday, April 16, 2026

‘Amazing Academy of Humanities at Jerusalem 26’

    
Click to enlarge.

There is something amazing in New Jersey Freemasonry. Jerusalem Lodge 26 in Plainfield is hosting diverse events connecting the Craft with the Humanities.

Of course, this should be happening in all lodges, but it isn’t, which is why Jerusalem’s Academy of Humanities instruction and enlightenment is so remarkable. Here’s what’s upcoming:







Academy of Humanities recent events included:

➢ The Glory of Geometry
➢ Great Masonic Writers
➢ Accessing the Divine Through Music

And there’s emphasis on music—opera!

The Magic Flute
Die Fledermaus
Hansel and Gretel
Anna Bolena
Don Giovanni

Plus, there are tutorials on sartorial style, manners, and other gentlemanly needs to which today’s man otherwise might not have direct access. Sure, there are all kinds of internet content and books, but these events make the quest for self-development a brotherly journey.

I doubt David Palladino-Sinclair would claim all the due credit for this initiative, but it is his brainchild.

And check out the book club!



Huzzah!
     

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

‘Sacramento: Freemasonry and the Declaration of Independence’

    

Speaking of conferences in California (see post below), the Scottish Rite bodies of Sacramento, Santa Rosa, and Stockton will host an educational celebration of America’s 250th anniversary this summer. From the publicity:


Freemasonry and the Ideals
of the Declaration of Independence
Saturday, August 8
Sacramento Scottish Rite
Masonic Center
6151 H Street, Sacramento
Click here

Speakers include Dr. Richard “Ric” Berman, Dr. John Cooper, and Dr. Susan Sommers.

Ric Berman researches and speaks on English, Irish, and American Freemasonry, with a focus on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He has written numerous journal articles and some ten books and has given keynote talks worldwide. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Ric holds a master’s degree in economics and a doctorate in history from the University of Cambridge and the University of Exeter, respectively, following which he spent two years post-doctoral research at the University of Oxford.

Ric has been a Freemason for more than forty years and has twice been the United Grand Lodge of England’s Prestonian Lecturer. He holds Grand Rank in the UGLE and is a Past Master of three English lodges, including Quatuor Coronati Lodge, the premier lodge of Masonic research, and chairs the QC Correspondence Circle, the oldest Masonic Research Society in the world. Ric is also an American Freemason, a member or honorary member of lodges in six states, a Fellow of the Philalethes Society and a member of the Society of Blue Friars.

A Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of California, John Cooper is the former Master of three California research lodges and a past President of the Philalethes Society–America’s oldest and largest Masonic research organization. He has presented papers at international conferences on the history of Freemasonry, and is a published author. John was a public school teacher and administrator, including a tour of duty as superintendent of a high school district in San Diego County before coming to San Francisco to become Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of California. He served in the latter position for eighteen years and was president of the Conference of Grand Secretaries. In 2013 he was elected as Grand Master of Masons in California and during his term as Grand Master he served as Chairman of the Conference of Grand Masters of Masons in North America.

John has a master’s degree in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles, and a Ph.D. in education from Claremont Graduate University. His main research interests are in the history of ideas, and the interaction of Freemasonry with political society. He is a Thirty-Third Degree Mason in the Scottish Rite, and is a Knight of the York Grand Cross of Honor. He also has held leadership positions in many of the smaller rites and degrees of Freemasonry.

Susan Mitchell Sommers, Professor Emeritus of History, Saint Vincent College, has been calling it like it is since her first year on the history faculty in 1993. At that time, there were few women teaching at Saint Vincent College and Susan brought the hidden lives of everyday people into the light, from small town citizens to Freemasons in esoteric communities. In her teaching she developed what she calls the Oatmeal Theory of History, which showcases the challenges and recognizes the importance of studying history as the stuff that both radically changes lives while those lives also appear to stand still. She explains to students that for thousands of years our ancestors got up every morning, ate a bowl of oatmeal and then went out into the fields to cultivate oats. Then they came home, ate a bowl of oatmeal and went to sleep. For thousands of years. But if we taught about that in history classes everyone would all get up and leave, even though it is the way things actually happened. We speed things up, highlight the changes, make history seem far more exciting than it generally was for the people living it. So, while Susan may talk about the Scientific Revolution or Spanish Civil War as times of sweeping change, she reminds us that most people were still eating oatmeal and growing oats.

Susan has published four books, forty articles, more than a dozen book reviews, and has delivered countless presentations. Her main teaching and research interests are in British and intellectual history, especially of the eighteenth century. Her publications include book-length studies of Freemasonry, esotericism and small-town parliamentary politics. Susan is working on a biography of Rev. James Anderson (1679-1739), a Presbyterian minister from Scotland who was responsible for the first book of Masonic constitutions in 1723. She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.


Logistics and more here.
     

Monday, April 13, 2026

‘Call for Papers: 2027 International Conference on Freemasonry’

    
I see it’s on the Grand Master’s calendar, so it is official: The 15th International Conference on Freemasonry is set for March 6 of next year. Hosted by the Masons of California, it’ll be back in Los Angeles, this time at the UCLA Faculty Club.

The theme for 2027 will be “Scotland and Freemasonry: The High Road, the Low Road, and the Road Less Traveled.” Organizers have issued the call for papers, saying:


“We are now accepting proposals for academic paper presentations for the 15th International Conference on Freemasonry, sponsored by the Grand Lodge of California and the California Masonic Foundation. Topics are open, but should be closely matched to the theme of the conference. Successful proposals will adhere to academic standards of original research and composition, and pursue original analyses. Please send curriculum vitae and 500-word proposal to Susan Mitchell Sommers here.”


Bro. Erich Huhn, who serves as both The ALR’s Senior Deacon and NJ LORE’s Secretary, while pursuing a Ph.D. in History on nineteenth century American Freemasonry, was a speaker at this year’s conference just four weeks ago. Based on his account of the affair, it sounds like a pretty wild weekend! I imagine outside the lecture hall, sherry was tippled, monocles were steamed, laughter was…was audible!

Send in your précis!

Kudos to whoever devised the conference title. “The high road” and “the low road” call to mind the Scottish folk song “The Bonnie Banks o’ Loch Lomond,” and “the road less traveled” reminds us of “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost, a California native and son of a Scottish immigrant mother.

And March 6, for that matter, is the Feast Day of St. Baldred, a hermit (therefore dear to my heart) of the eighth century who came to be known as the Apostle of the Lothians.
     

Friday, April 10, 2026

‘Going to Nutley Lodge next month’

    
It’s official: The Magpie Mason will return to Nutley Lodge 25 in New Jersey for a speaking engagement—first time in ten years, as a matter of fact. I guess that’s how long it takes for everyone to forget the reasons not to invite me over and speak.

On Monday, May 4, I will be dining out yet again on my talk: “It’s Just Common Sense: Thomas Reid and the Fellow Craft Degree.” This is an explanation of how a very influential Scottish Enlightenment treatise came to provide part of the Middle Chamber Lecture, with context on what the Second Degree looked like before this lecture was devised, and other admissible evidence.

Lodge tyles at 7:30. 175 Chestnut Street in Nutley, really only a short ride outside of Manhattan.

My own lodge’s meetings coincide with Nutley’s, but not on this date due to the Grand Lodge of New York’s Annual Communication that day.
     

Monday, April 6, 2026

‘A poetic chamber of reflection’

    
Click to enlarge.

RW Bro. Francis Dumaurier, of l’Union Française Lodge 17 in the Tenth Manhattan District, recently launched what he calls his “personal Chamber of Reflection.” Brotherly Rhymes 
exhibits Francis’ poetry.

“I personally wrote each story in the classic style of three quatrains of alternating alexandrine verses, and I illustrated them with assistance from Google’s Gemini and/or ChatGPT image generators,” he says in an introduction. “A new one will be posted each Thursday afternoon for as long as I can manage to do it.”

Click here.

Click to enlarge.

“These ‘Brotherly Rhymes’ are offered to you free of charge, and I am solely responsible for their contents, which are not sanctioned by any Grand Lodge, any other organized institution, nor any individual person or group of persons living or dead,” he also says. “The illustrations are not photographs of anything or anybody. These images were created with assistance from AI to illustrate each story, and they are works of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events or localities, is purely coincidental. I hope that you will enjoy visiting my personal Chamber of Reflection.”

Click to enlarge.

Francis is Grand Representative of the Grande Loge Nationale Française near the Grand Lodge of the State of New York. Beyond the apartments of the temple, he is the author recently of Giorgio Gomelsky: For Your Love, about the life of his friend (and our Masonic brother), the legendary music impressario. Francis also is an actor. Surely you’ve seen him in Marty Supreme and The Artist; maybe you caught him on SNL, Letterman, or Conan. Busy man!

Click here for his Brotherly Rhymes.
     

Friday, April 3, 2026

‘Let the benign Genius of the Mystic Art preside’

    
Monitor of the Work, Lectures and Ceremonies of Ancient Craft Masonry in the Jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York is available from Lodge Services or your lodge secretary. (Okay, maybe a graphic designer might have helped a little with the cover but, hey, it’s done.)

Many years in the making, Grand Lodge’s Monitor is published and is available from Lodge Services. Its proper title, Monitor of the Work, Lectures and Ceremonies of Ancient Craft Masonry in the Jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York, the book is copyrighted 2025, but I learned of its existence—again, after anticipation of years—just a week ago through a comment on Faceypage. Got my copy yesterday.

Immediately, I searched for content unknown to me, and no sooner than on Page 7 are Opening Charges.

Opening Charges?

Opening Charges!

You probably know a Closing Charge, delivered at, yes, the close of the lodge communication. I doubt it is ubiquitous throughout the country, but it is found near and far. In New York, we call it the Harris Charge (“…you are now about to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue…”). It is an optional coda to the meeting, although I don’t know why a Master would opt out of it. When it was my privilege to serve in the East twenty-one years ago in New Jersey, that was possibly my favorite piece of Work. It differs slightly from New York’s version.

Who’s Harris?

Bro. Thaddeus Harris
The Rev. Thaddeus Mason Harris, D.D. (1768-1842) was a Massachusetts Freemason. More than that, he was that Grand Lodge’s first Grand Chaplain. (Synchronously enough, he laid down his working tools on this very date, April 3.) He also served as Corresponding Grand Secretary and, in 1812, was appointed Deputy Grand Master! A remarkable seminal figure in Massachusetts Freemasonry, but he is a topic for another edition of The Magpie Mason. (This portrait of Harris hangs, if I remember right, on the ground floor of the Boston Masonic Building, home of the Grand Lodge of Masons in Massachusetts.)

Where was I going with this? Yes! These Opening Charges.

They are not new to Freemasonry, but they’re news to me and they are terrific brief orations you’ll be proud to hear at the start of your lodge meetings. There are two, prefaced with this:


Performance of an Opening Charge is optional. One charge or the other, without alteration or combination, may be given in full immediately following the prayer in the Ritual of Opening, or at the commencement of any untiled Masonic event. Only The Monitor or The Chaplain’s Book are to be used if the charge is read in a tiled lodge.


The first Charge:


The ways of science are beautiful. Knowledge is attained by degrees. Wisdom dwells with contemplation. There are we to seek her. Though the passage be difficult, the farther we proceed, the easier it will become. If we are united, our society must flourish. Let all things give place to peace and good fellowship. Uniting in the grand design, let us be happy in ourselves, and endeavor to contribute to the happiness of others. Let us promote the useful arts; and by them mark our superiority and distinction. Let us cultivate the moral virtues; and improve in all that is good and amiable. Let the genius of Masonry preside over our conduct; and under its sovereign sway let us act with becoming dignity. Let our recreations be innocent, and pursued with moderation. Never let us expose our character to derision. Thus shall we act in conformity to our precepts, and support the name we have always borne, of being a respectable, a regular, and a uniform society.


The second Charge:


The ways of Virtue are beautiful. Knowledge is attained by degrees. Wisdom dwells in contemplation: there we must seek her. Let us then, Brethren, apply ourselves with becoming zeal to the practice of the excellent principles inculcated by our Order. Let us ever remember that the great objects of our association are the restraint of improper desires and passions, the cultivation of an active benevolence, and the promotion of a correct knowledge of the duties we owe to God, to our neighbor, and to ourselves. Let us be united and practice with assiduity the sacred tenets of our order. Let all private animosities, of any unhappily exist, give place to affection and brotherly love. It is useless parade to talk of the subjection of irregular passions within the walls of the Lodge, if we permit them to triumph in our daily intercourse with each other. Uniting in the grand design, let us be happy ourselves, and endeavor to promote the happiness of others. Let us cultivate the great moral virtues which are laid down on our Masonic Trestleboard, and improve in everything that is good, amiable and useful. Let the benign Genius of the Mystic Art preside over our councils, and under her sway let us act with a dignity becoming the high moral character of our venerable institution.


So, if these stirring words did not flow from RW Harris’ heart and mind, whence came they? I thought some of the phrases sounded familiar, but wasn’t sure if my memory was tricking me, so I asked Sam.

RW Samuel Kinsey, of Mariners 67, is Chairman of the Custodians of the Work, the team that preserves Grand Lodge’s Standard Work and Lectures and that publishes these books we need to learn our rituals and orations. He provided me a snippet of the Custodians’ report to Grand Lodge, which will meet next month:


The antecedents of the Opening Charges may be found in A Vindication of Masonry and its Excellency demonstrated in a Discourse at the Consecration of the Lodge of Vernon Kilwinning, on May 15, 1741 by Charles Leslie. This lengthy discourse was later incorporated into the first edition of William Preston’s Illustrations of Masonry, with increasingly revised and reorganized forms of the Vindication continuing to feature in all subsequent editions. In the early decades of the nineteenth century Thaddeus Mason Harris adapted one of Preston’s later versions into the first Opening Charge given above (the shorter of the two). The second Opening Charge originates in Charles Whitlock Moore’s The Masonic Trestle-board, which purported to contain the working from the Baltimore Convention of 1843. This is the Opening Charge that can be found in Monitors with relevancy to our jurisdiction throughout the remainder of the nineteenth century. Although the two Opening Charges reference the same source material and evoke a similar sentiment, your committee believes both are beautiful expressions that deserve to be authorized for use.


There’s a lot more marrow in the bone of this edition of The Monitor, the first published since 1989. The Installation of Officers is revised, just in time for our Installation nights. Now I have to see what The Chaplain’s Book is. Never heard of it.

From the 1740s to the 1840s to the second quarter of the twenty-first century, what we, as Free and Accepted Masons, think, say, and do in lodge remains continuous and relevant, no doubt thanks to our own consistency when we “mix again with the world.”

If you are of these households of the faithful, I wish you a Happy Passover or Happy Easter.
     

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

‘New book: The Dream of a Noachide’

    
A. Terán photo
Grand Master Steven A. Rubin presents RW Thomas Barat his regalia as our Grand Representative near the Grand Lodge of Hungary at Abravanel 1116’s Table Lodge on March 25.

Full Magpie coverage of last night’s unforgettable ALR meeting is forthcoming but, first, some great news about one of our brethren. Bro. Thomas Barat has authored a newly published book!

Egy Noachita Álma is a Hungarian text for the youngest Entered Apprentice as well as for the petitioner seeking admission to the worshipful lodge. The Dream of a Noachide, in English, is available, partially (minus Hungarian Masonic history), online here.

It has been an exciting week for Bro. Tom. Last Wednesday, his lodge, Abravanel 1116, welcomed the Grand Master to its Table Lodge for the traditional apron presentation, as Tom was invested with his regalia as the Grand Representative of the Grand Lodge of New York near the Grand Lodge of Hungary. Huzzah!

Tom is in the Masonic blogosphere too. Click here.

And we will bring him to the lectern of The American Lodge of Research one night, and I’ll let you know when that is scheduled.
     

Monday, March 30, 2026

‘AMD Ingatherings in NY & NJ’

    
I’ll close out the Magpie month of March with AMD news. The Allied Masonic Degrees in New York and New Jersey have announced Ingatherings. The graphics below (click to enlarge) have all the info.



      

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

‘More music on Palm Sunday’

    

Palm Sunday arrives on the 29th, and Bro. Erik Carlson has a musical program planned for the Church of St. Thomas More.

Erik is our organist at Publicity Lodge 1000, and he plays for other lodges in Masonic Hall. He also is the director of music at the church. From the publicity:


You are invited! The ancient Christian text, Stabat Mater (Mary suffering beneath the Cross) will be performed by GRAMMY® musicians under the direction of Bro. Erik Carlson. Musical settings for choir and orchestra by Vivaldi, Palestrina, Rheinberger, and others. A goodwill donation of $20 is requested.


Thomas More is located at 65 East 89th Street, in the Yorkville part of Manhattan. “Sounds” like a great way to spend some time in the city. Nice weather is forecast too.
     

Monday, March 23, 2026

‘Research lodge to visit Shenandoah Valley’

    
On this date—and at this hour—in 1862, a lesser known, but nevertheless consequential, clash raged in the Shenandoah Valley during the U.S. Civil War—so that’s were the research lodge is headed next month.

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia in 1995, will meet Saturday, April 11. Odd thing: We will open at one location, but close at another. No Mackey Landmark nor Schrödinger theory is a factor.

Mt. Jackson 103
Specifically, we will meet Saturday morning at ten o’clock inside Magnetic Lodge 184’s home in Stanley. I don’t know the meeting agenda, but after it’s tackled we’ll go on refreshment, have lunch there, and then travel a few minutes north to Mount Jackson Lodge 103, in Mount Jackson, to close.

The night before, we will gather for dinner at Southern Kitchen in New Market, but the customary extracurricular activities (visits to historic places, Saturday supper) are not pre-planned this time, which is disappointing, but we’ll think on our feet.

The recommended sites to see include:


I doubt I’ll have time for all those, but I’ll see what the brethren prefer and go with them.

The Battle of Kernstown? The lodge trestleboard informs us:


Intelligence Failures
and the Road to Kernstown

Nathaniel P. Banks
By March 1862, Maj. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s command in the Valley had dwindled to fewer than 4,000 effective soldiers due to illness and reassignments. Facing a Union force of nearly 20,000 under Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks, Jackson was forced to retreat forty miles south of Winchester to Mount Jackson. Believing the Confederates were no longer a threat, the U.S. War Department ordered Banks to move most of his command east to support Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan’s Peninsula Campaign.

James Shields
On March 21, Confederate sympathizers observed Union troops leaving Winchester but failed to notice that Brig. Gen. James Shields’ division remained nearby. This faulty intelligence led Jackson to believe he faced only a small rear guard. Eager to prevent Union reinforcements from reaching McClellan, Jackson marched his exhausted division northward to strike.

The Battle for Pritchard’s Hill

On March 22, a skirmish broke out south of Winchester. During the fight, General Shields was wounded by shrapnel, leaving Col. Nathan Kimball in operational command. Despite Shields’ orders to chase the Confederates, Kimball held the high ground at Pritchard’s Hill.

The main battle began at nine the following morning. Jackson, still operating under the belief that he held the numerical advantage, conducted a brief reconnaissance and decided to attack. In reality, Kimball had roughly 7–9,000 troops available, significantly outnumbering Jackson’s 4,000 men.
 
The Fight for Sandy Ridge

Finding the Union center at Pritchard’s Hill too strong, Jackson moved his infantry and artillery westward toward Sandy Ridge to attempt a flanking maneuver. By 3 p.m., Confederate artillery on the ridge had successfully suppressed the Union guns on the hill.

The tide turned when Union Col. Erastus B. Tyler’s brigade counterattacked. The fighting centered around a shoulder-high stone wall, where Confederate infantry under Brig. Gen. Richard B. Garnett held their ground with desperate tenacity. For more than an hour, the two sides engaged in a blistering musketry duel at close range. By late afternoon, the Confederate line began to buckle. Jackson’s troops were running dangerously low on ammunition, and Kimball had funneled fresh Union reinforcements into the fight. Seeing his flank being turned and his men exhausted, Garnett ordered a retreat near sunset to save his command.


Kernstown Battlefield will be open today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. for tours, etc. to mark the 164th anniversary of the first Battle of Kernstown.


Aftermath and Strategic Impact

The Battle of Kernstown ended after ten hours of combat. The casualties were heavy relative to the size of the forces:

• Confederate: 733 killed, wounded, or captured (22 percent of the force).
• Union: 575 casualties.

Though Jackson lost the battle—his only defeat as an independent commander—he achieved his primary goal. The intensity of the attack convinced Washington that Jackson had a much larger army. Fearing for the safety of the capital, the War Department pulled 20,000 Union troops away from the Peninsula Campaign and sent them back to the Shenandoah Valley. This diversion weakened McClellan’s advance on Richmond and allowed Jackson to begin the series of victories that would make him a legend.


Is there a Masonic link to all this? I guess we’ll find out when a paper is presented in lodge.

Our next meeting will be July 18 at Monterey Pass, Pennsylvania, not far from Gettysburg. On October 10 we’ll be back in Virginia at Fort Monroe.

Get well wishes to Bro. Bennett Hart, our Secretary and our District Deputy Grand Master. I hope we’ll see him there in three weeks.